Quote:
Originally Posted by XSAXS
Hi Markul,
It looks like you've built an impressive and unique platform. I congratulate you on your big roll out!
But I, and many like me, have never really trusted freehosts. Historically it seems they ALWAYS turn out to be more trouble than they're worth.
So if you don't mind, please explain...
* How will you keep your servers and staff running if everything is free, free, free?
* In other words, what is the hidden expense for the webmaster?
* Skimming a percentage of traffic?
* Embedding your own banners?
(I'm not saying those tactics are bad.) I'm just acknowledging that your overhead for a project like this must be pretty high. And there has to be an expense to the webmaster somewhere to cover it.
I read your entire block of promo text, and the core question -- ie. What is this going to cost me so that they can stay in business? -- was not answered.
Full disclosure please.
Thanks.
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I started out in this industry using zippedsites, I also had hundreds of blogs with thumblogger. So I know the pain when services close. But I also saw a market that was underdeveloped and while my first shot at this was far from perfect, it did confirm my thesis that it was a viable place to allocate resources and that the project had a future.
The original plan was to refer webmasters to sponsors and skim a % of traffic. That plan has changed. Especially since we are seeing the big G. blanket remove sites that skim traffic. And skimming is bad for a couple of other reasons:
*It's hard to convert skimmed traffic (but you can sell it, for very little).
*It's an extremely bad experience for the surfer to just be blind redirected.
So we won't be doing that. But we do reserve the right to, if shit really hits the fan down the road. It's all in the terms. But we really don't want to do that for the reasons I listed. And we won't have to, because we have 3 revenue streams:
The first is referring webmasters to sponsor programs
This is done via the sponsor module that will be launched with the tube sites and further built on with the next two site types released after tubes. People don't have to use our referral link, but since it won't cost them anything we hope they do (and they do).
Second stream is referring webmasters to advertisers
Right now we have
PlugRush integrated and we plan to have more, so people can choose or use them all in rotation. Again we are seeing good numbers on webmasters signing up via our link.
The final stream are Premium Accounts.
For a small monthly fee, you can pay to unlock site customization - now this won't be available until we've implemented the tube system and possibly not until we are done with all 4 site types. At this point I have not decided when we want to open up for this.
A Premium Account unlocks the ad-zones so you don't have to use the advertisers we have integrated, it also unlocks the ability to edit the stylesheets of the sites and will put you on top in the support queue. Later down the road we'll have more features built in that I don't want to talk about right now, but Premium Users will have a little extra that makes it worth it.
So the model for easy
Xsites is a freemium business model. Simple as that. A freemium business model requires the right balance and I am confident that we can and will have that right mix (I have a mainstream background in both web-based freemium computer games and business consulting, so it's not like I just read something fancy on a wikipedia page)
I hope this answers your question XSAXS
Quote:
Originally Posted by brassmonkey
its not loading
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Not sure if you are talking about easy
Xsites, but it is loading for both me and my main developer. If people experience outages, it could be related to the namecheap DDoS problems.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jel
nice one mate 
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Thanks Jel
